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A cascading failure during the 24 May 2013 great Okhotsk deep earthquake

42

Citations

30

References

2014

Year

Abstract

Abstract On 24 May 2013, the largest ever‐recorded deep earthquake occurred beneath Sea of Okhotsk. A multiple point source inversion procedure is applied to constrain source process of this earthquake, based on waveform modeling of both direct P and SH waves and near‐surface reflected pP and sSH waves. Our results indicate that the earthquake consists of six major subevents separated in space and time, encompassing a horizontal dimension of 64 ± 4 km along ~ N160°E and a downward depth extension of 35 ± 4 km. The geographic distribution and focal mechanisms of the inferred subevents and foreshock/aftershock locations do not fit into plane rupture. We suggest that the earthquake can be best explained by a cascading failure of shear instability within preexisting weak zones in the region, with the perturbation of stress generated by a shear instability triggering another.

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